Miss or Mrs.?
As he put the question, they might have heard (if they had not been too completely engrossed in each other to listen) the footsteps returning—one pair of footsteps only this time. Natalie’s prolonged absence had begun to surprise her aunt, and had roused a certain vague distrust in Richard’s mind. He walked back again along the deck by himself. He looked absently in the main cabin as he passed it. The store-room skylight came next. In his present frame of mind, would he look absently into the store-room too?     

       “Let me go!” said Natalie.     

       Launce only answered, “Say yes,” and held her as if he would never let her go again.     

       At the same moment Miss Lavinia’s voice rose shrill from the deck calling for Natalie. There was but one way of getting free from him. She said,       “I’ll think of it.” Upon that, he kissed her and let her go.     

       The door had barely closed on her when the lowering face of Richard Turlington appeared on a level with the side of the sky-light, looking down into the store-room at Launce.     

       “Halloo!” he called out roughly. “What are you doing in the steward’s room?”      

       Launce took up a box of matches on the dresser. “I’m getting a light,” he answered readily.     

       “I allow nobody below, forward of the main cabin, without my leave. The steward has permitted a breach of discipline on board my vessel. The steward will leave my service.”      

       “The steward is not to blame.”      

       “I am the judge of that. Not you.”      

       Launce opened his lips to reply. An outbreak between the two men appeared to be inevitable, when the sailing-master of the yacht joined his employer on deck, and directed Turlington’s attention to a question which is never to be trifled with at sea, the question of wind and tide.     

       The yacht was then in the Bristol Channel, at the entrance to Bideford Bay. The breeze, fast freshening, was also fast changing the direction from which it blew. The favorable tide had barely three hours more to run.     

       “The wind’s shifting, sir,” said the 
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